Characterization of Biological Fallout Particles of Cleanrooms to Measure Spacecraft Cleanliness

Date

2017-07-16

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

47th International Conference on Environmental Systems

Abstract

NASA cleanrooms are humidity, temperature-regulated, and particle contaminant-controlled environments used for spacecraft assembly. Microorganisms, which are crucial contaminants shed from humans and transported through the environment, can adapt to the oligotrophic cleanroom conditions. These biogenic particles need to be identified to extend our knowledge of biological contamination for future NASA mission use. Here, we devised an aluminum coupon with polycarbonate filter setup to collect fallout particles from an ISO 5 and an ISO 7 cleanroom. We demonstrated the presence of microbial particles, as standalone entities and associated with inert particles in cleanroom environments. The contamination was confirmed as biogenic in virtue of estimating the elemental composition of individual and aggregated particles using an epifluorescence and Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy (FESEM) coupled with an energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX). Epifluorescence microscopy showed that the particles were stained less (25%) with SYTO 9 and more (75%) with propidium iodide, suggesting that the suspected biogenic particles are membrane-compromised. Remarkably, biological particles such as bacteria and fungal spores/hyphae were observed at sizes ranging from 2 to 70 µm, with abundant C and O elemental signatures and essential tracers (Na, Mg, K, Ca and Cl). Inert particles (2 to 500 µm) that were characterized included compositions such as silica (SiO2), aluminosilicates (Al, Si), and carbonaceous fibers. Furthermore, we designed and illustrated a unique correlative epifluorescence and FE-SEM method to strengthen this approach by acquiring the same biogenic particles in the same filter coupon for a one-to-one comparison. Interestingly, the SYTO 9 stained particles showed abundant C and O elemental signature implying that they are viable microbial particles. Constant evaluation of cleanroom biological and inert particles will help to characterize biological contamination for future NASA missions (e.g. Mars 2020).

Description

Ganesh Babu Malli Mohan, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), USA
James Benardini, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), USA
Ryan Hendrickson, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), USA
Kasthuri Venkateswaran, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), USA
Moogega Stricker, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), USA
ICES406: Spacecraft Water/Air Quality: Maintenance and Monitoring
The 47th International Conference on Environmental Systems was held in South Carolina, USA on 16 July 2017 through 20 July 2017.

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Keywords

planetary protection, spacecraft cleanliness, particle distribution, biological fallout

Citation